Xero, the cloud-based accounting software firm, said it has sufficient cash reserves to reach breakeven without having to raise more capital, after posting a 67 per cent jump in full-year operating revenue and a wider net loss.
The Wellington-based company said its net loss was $82.5 million in the 12 months ended March 31, from a loss of $69.5 million a year earlier. Operating revenue rose to $207 million from $121 million, but was swallowed up by a 53 per cent increase in operating expenses to $249 million as the company focusses on building its subscriber base.
Xero used up $86 million on operations and investments in the latest year, down from $88 million a year earlier. It had cash and equivalents of $184 million at year-end, down from about $203 million at Dec. 31, suggesting it burned through about $19 million in the final quarter and has at least two more years to reach breakeven before needing more funds. Paid subscribers jumped to 717,000 in 2016, from 475,000 in the 2015 March year.
"We have extended our position globally, and lead the small business cloud accounting software market in Australia, New Zealand and the United Kingdom by subscriber numbers," chief executive Rod Drury said in a statement.
Annualised committed monthly revenue, a favoured metric for tech companies, rose 62 per cent to $257.9 million and its ebitda margin improved to -29 per cent from -49 per cent.